The precise requirements of Hedgehog (Hh) pathway activity in vertebrate central nervous system development remain unclear, particularly in organisms with both maternally and zygotically derived signaling. Here we describe the motoneural phenotype of zebrafish that lack maternal and zygotic contributions of the Hh signaling transducer Smoothened (MZsmo mutants) and therefore are completely devoid of ligand-dependent pathway activation. Some functional primary motoneurons (PMNs) persist in the absence of Hh signaling, and we find that their induction requires both basal Gli transcription factor activity and retinoic acid (RA) signaling. We also provide evidence that RA pathway activation can modulate Gli function in a Hh ligand-independent manner. These findings support a model in which Hh and RA signaling cooperate to promote PMN cell fates in zebrafish.
INTRODUCTION
Hedgehog (Hh) pathway activation is essential for vertebrate development (Ingham and McMahon, 2001) and can lead to oncogenesis (Teglund and Toftgard, 2010). Hh ligands (Echelard et al., 1993) bind to the transmembrane receptor Patched 1 (Ptc1, or Ptch1) (Stone et al., 1996), thereby alleviating Ptc1-mediated inhibition of Smoothened (Smo), a G protein-coupled receptor-like protein (Zhang et al., 2001). Smo in turn regulates Gli transcription factors, which exist as full-length transcriptional activators and N-terminal repressors (Wang et al., 2000; Bai et al., 2002).
In mammals, sonic hedgehog (Shh) is expressed in the notochord and floor plate of the developing spinal cord, establishing a dorsoventral gradient of Hh activity that is required for ventral neural cell fates including motoneurons (Ericson et al., 1995; Roelink et al., 1995; Chiang et al., 1996). The role of Hh signaling in teleost motoneuron development, however, is less clear. Zebrafish have primary and secondary motoneurons (PMNs and SMNs), which differ in their time of appearance during development (Kimmel and Westerfield, 1990). Elevated Hh signaling induces extra PMNs and SMNs (Chandrasekhar et al., 1998), and Hh signaling is necessary for SMN specification (Varga et al., 2001). Although zebrafish lacking zygotic Smo retain significant numbers of PMNs (Chen et al., 2001; Varga et al., 2001), it has been reported that nearly all PMNs can be eliminated in embryos treated with the Smo antagonist cyclopamine (Chen et al., 2001) or injected with morpholinos (MOs) targeting Hh ligands (Lewis and Eisen, 2001). These observations have led to the hypothesis that PMNs remaining in zygotic smo mutants are specified by maternal smo activity (Chen et al., 2001; Varga et al., 2001).
Alternatively, the depletion of PMNs in zebrafish treated with cyclopamine or Hh ligand-targeting MOs could be due to off-target effects of these reagents or associated impurities, and other pathways might induce PMNs in the absence of Hh signaling. One candidate is retinoic acid (RA) signaling, which can promote mammalian motoneuron specification (Pierani et al., 1999; Novitch et al., 2003) and is localized to the anterior zebrafish spinal cord (Perz-Edwards et al., 2001), where PMNs persist in zygotic smo mutants. Basal Gli activity could also enable PMN induction, as zebrafish Gli function is not fully dependent on Hh signaling (Huang and Schier, 2009).
Here we report that zebrafish lacking both maternal and zygotic smo function (MZsmo mutants) exhibit a complete loss of Hh signaling yet still form PMNs. We find that both RA signaling and Smo-independent Gli activity promote PMN genesis in MZsmo embryos, in part by fostering PMN progenitor formation and neuronal proliferation. Furthermore, RA signaling can increase basal Gli activity. These results suggest that Hh and RA signaling act in concert to induce PMNs during neural tube development.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Zebrafish husbandry
Wild-type AB and smohi1640/+ zebrafish were obtained from the Zebrafish International Resource Center (ZIRC), gli1ts269/+ and gli2aty17/+ animals were provided by R. Karlstrom (Karlstrom et al., 1999; Karlstrom et al., 2003), and MZsmohi1640 zebrafish were created as described (Mich et al., 2009). Naturally fertilized embryos were cultured in E3 medium at 28.5°C with a vehicle control, cyclopamine (a gift from Infinity Pharmaceuticals; 100 μM at the one-cell stage), SANT75 [a gift from S. Lin (Yang et al., 2009); 100 μM at the one-cell stage], diethylaminobenzaldehyde (DEAB; Sigma; 10 μM at the one-cell or sphere stage with similar effects), and/or all-trans-retinoic acid (RA; Sigma; 10 or 100 nM at the one-cell or sphere stage with equal results for each time).
Oligonucleotide injections
shha mRNA was synthesized with the mMessage mMachine Kit (Applied Biosystems) and injected at 100 pg/embryo. MOs (Gene Tools) were (5′ to 3′): dead end, GCTGGGCATCCATGTCTCCGACCAT (3 ng/embryo) (Ciruna et al., 2002); gli1, CCGACACACCCGCTACACCCACAGT (4 ng/embryo) (Karlstrom et al., 2003); gli2a, GGATGATGTAAAGTTCGTCAGTTGC (8 ng/embryo) (Karlstrom et al., 2003); gli2b, AGCTGGAACACCGGCCTCCATTCTG (8 ng/embryo) (Devine et al., 2009); gli3, ACAACTGGGCATTCCTCAGAGCATC (8 ng/embryo) (Tyurina et al., 2005); and tp53, GCGCCATTGCTTTGCAAGAATTG (4 ng/embryo) (Robu et al., 2007). Gli MOs were co-injected with tp53 MO, and gli2a/gli3 and gli2a/gli2b/gli3 MO combinations were co-injected in equimolar amounts for a total of 8 ng plus 4 ng tp53 MO.
Whole-mount in situ hybridization
Protocols were as described (Jowett and Lettice, 1994) using the following probes: isl1 (Lewis and Eisen, 2001); isl2a (Lewis and Eisen, 2001); nkx2.2a (Woods and Talbot, 2005); ptc1 (Woods and Talbot, 2005); smo (Chen et al., 2001); fzd8b, amplified with primers (5′ to 3′) ATGGACTCGCCTACACAGGG and TCACACACGAGAAAGTGGCATT; gli1, ATGCCAGTGGATATGCAGC and GATGTGCTCATTATTGATGTGATGC; gli2a, ATGGAGACCACAAGTCCCACC and CCACCCATCGACACACAAACT; gli2b, TCCAGCTCCCGCAGAGAAG and TTGAGCAGCCCTCGAACG; gli3, TCTGAGGAATGCCCAGTTGTC and CCTCCTCTTTATCGCCCTCTT; hoxb4a, TGGCCATGAGTTCCTATTTGAT and CTATAGACTTGGCGGAGGTCC; olig2, ATGGACTCTGACACGAGCCG and GGCTGAGGAAGGTTTGCCA; and pax6a, ATGCCTCAAAAAGAATACTATAACCG and TCACTGTAGTCTGGGCCAGTATTG. For PMN quantification, at least 40 embryos were analyzed per condition using isl2a staining of 18-somite [18 hours post-fertilization (hpf)] embryos, except for the smo mutant data in Fig. 2O (at least five embryos per condition in this case).
gli2b transcript levels were quantified by acquiring color images of gli2b-stained flat-mounted embryos using a Leica M205FA stereomicroscope. The images were cropped to the neural plate region using Photoshop (Adobe) and converted into monochromatic images with inverted pixel intensities to correlate gli2b staining and pixel intensity. Raw pixel intensity files were then generated by ImageJ (NIH) and imported into R software for data analysis. Five to seven embryos were imaged for each experimental condition.
Whole-mount immunostaining
Protocols were as described (Macdonald, 1999) using the following antibodies: slow muscle myosin [F59, Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank (DSHB), 1:5 dilution]; fast muscle myosin (F310, DSHB, 1:5); synaptic vesicles (SV2, DSHB, 1:10); Mnx1 (81.5C10, DSHB, 1:20); motoneurons (zn-1, ZIRC, 1:50); synaptotagmin 2 (znp-1, ZIRC, 1:10); lens fiber cells (zl-1, ZIRC, 1:500); Isl1/2 (39.4D5, DSHB, 1:10); phosphohistone H3 (3465S, Cell Signaling, 1:750); and Alexa Fluor 594-conjugated α-bungarotoxin (Invitrogen, 1:250). Alexa Fluor 488- and 594-conjugated secondary antibodies (Invitrogen) were diluted 1:500.
Twitching assays
For stimulus-induced twitching, 24-hpf embryos were prodded on their yolk, and their responses were tabulated (n>250). For spontaneous twitching, a field of 24-hpf embryos was videorecorded at room temperature for 5 minutes (8× magnification, 100 mseconds/frame) and scored (n>150). For voltage-induced twitching, a square-wave (10-msecond pulse of 5 V) was applied to 24-hpf embryos (n=25) using an electroporation apparatus (Harvard Apparatus BTX ECM 830), and responses were videorecorded.
Quantitative (q) RT-PCR
Fifty embryos were lysed in 1 ml TRIzol (Invitrogen) to obtain crude RNA. Then, 10 μg crude RNA was treated with 2 units of DNase TURBO (Applied Biosystems) at 37°C for 30 minutes, purified by phenol/chloroform extraction, and reverse transcribed using the Superscript III Kit (Invitrogen). qPCR was performed using a Roche 480 LightCycler, SYBR Green I Master Kit and the following primers (5′ to 3′): β-actin, TCACCTCTCTTGCTCCTTCC and GGGCCAGACTCATCGTACTC; ef1a, AACCCCAAGGCTCTCAAATC and TCTCAACGCTCTTGATGACG; gli1, GTTTGCCACTGGAAGGACTG and GATGCGTCTTCAGGTTCTCC; hhip, GGTTTGGCGAAGATGAATTAG and CACTCCTTTGGAACTTGTGGT; nkx2.2a, TACTCATTACACGGCCTGTCC and CTTGGAAAAGAGCACCCTCC; ptc1, TGCCATTGAAACGGACATAG and TTCCTTCCTGTTTGGGTGTC; and ptc2, GCAGGCTGGTAGGATCACTC and GCGTTTGGGTTGATTATTCC.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Zebrafish maternal smo persists through gastrulation and mediates patterning
As described previously (Mich et al., 2009), we generated MZsmo zebrafish, which exhibit Hh signaling-deficient phenotypes of partial cyclopia, ventral body curvature, circulation defects, and U-shaped somites (Fig. 1A-C). The smohi1640 allele used in these studies strongly disrupts smo transcription (Chen et al., 2001), allowing observation of maternal smo by comparing smo transcript levels in MZsmo and smo mutants. Maternal smo persisted until the bud stage (10 hpf) (Fig. 1D-F), at which point it was primarily restricted to the anterior neural plate (Fig. 1E).
In comparison to wild-type zebrafish and zygotic smo mutants, MZsmo embryos exhibit more severe mispatterning of the adenohypophyseal placode (supplementary material Fig. S1) and the zona limitans intrathalamica (Fig. 1G-I). Maternal smo therefore promotes some aspects of zebrafish embryogenesis, presumably by transducing Hh signals.
MZsmo zebrafish lack detectable Hh signaling
To assay Hh responsiveness in wild-type and mutant embryos, we injected zygotes with shha mRNA and assessed Hh target gene transcription (nkx2.2a and ptc1). Exogenous shha expanded nkx2.2 and ptc1 expression in wild-type embryos (Fig. 1J,M), and smo mutants responded weakly, but detectably (Fig. 1K,N), as previously reported (Varga et al., 2001). However, MZsmo embryos did not respond to exogenous Hh ligand (Fig. 1L,O). qRT-PCR analysis confirmed that shha mRNA-injected MZsmo embryos lack Hh pathway activation (Fig. 1P).
MZsmo embryos have motor defects yet retain anterior PMNs
MZsmo zebrafish exhibit more severe paralysis than smo mutants in response to stimulus-induced and spontaneous twitching but not voltage-induced twitching (Fig. 2A). The muscle is not more severely mispatterned in MZsmo embryos (supplementary material Fig. S2) and Rohon-Beard (RB) sensory neurons were retained (Fig. 2E,N). These data suggest that the greater paralysis of MZsmo embryos is due to a defective motoneural apparatus.
To investigate the basis of these motoneural defects, we examined PMN genesis in MZsmo embryos. We observed fewer and more anteriorly restricted PMNs (Fig. 2C-N), which retained native identity and activity as assessed by a battery of PMN markers (supplementary material Fig. S3). The MZsmo motor defect is therefore likely to be due to decreased numbers of PMNs rather than to attenuated intrinsic activity of the remaining neurons. Yet, contrary to earlier predictions (Chen et al., 2001; Varga et al., 2001), all MZsmo mutants retained PMNs, indicating that Hh signaling is not required for their formation.
Basal Gli activity promotes motoneurogenesis
Since PMNs can form in MZsmo zebrafish, one possibility is that basal Gli activity is sufficient to induce PMN development. In addition to a single smo gene, zebrafish have four Gli homologs – the constitutively active gli1 and gli2a, gli2b and gli3 – which have full-length activator and C-terminally truncated repressor states. To assess basal Gli activities, we treated wild-type zebrafish embryos, gli1ts269 mutants [which lack Gli1 function (Karlstrom et al., 2003)] and gli2aty17 mutants [which express a repressor form of Gli2a (Karlstrom et al., 1999)] with cyclopamine and assessed ptc1 expression (Fig. 3A-F). Cyclopamine treatment (100 μM) reduced ptc1 transcription in wild-type embryos to levels similar to that in MZsmo mutants (Fig. 3D; supplementary material Fig. S4); homozygous gli2a mutant embryos were indistinguishable from their wild-type and heterozygous siblings after cyclopamine treatment (Fig. 3E), which is likely to be because both wild-type Gli2a and truncated Gli2a mutants act as repressors when Smo is inhibited. By contrast, approximately one-quarter of cyclopamine-exposed progeny from gli1ts269/+ incrosses exhibited a near complete loss of ptc1 expression (Fig. 3F), although the embryos did not segregate into two distinct groups (see below). MZsmo embryos injected with gli1 MO had significantly reduced Hh target gene expression as gauged by qRT-PCR (supplementary material Fig. S5).
Next, we tested whether Gli1 promotes Smo-independent motoneurogenesis. Identifiable by their missing hindbrain cranial motoneurons (Chandrasekhar et al., 1999), homozygous gli1ts269 and gli2aty17 mutants have disorganized PMNs (Zeller et al., 2002), which are fewer in number than those in wild-type embryos (Fig. 3G-I). Cyclopamine decreased PMN numbers to a similar extent in wild-type and gli2aty17/+ incrossed progeny (Fig. 3J,K,M), but strongly depleted PMNs in gli1ts269/+ incrossed progeny (Fig. 3L,M). Cyclopamine-treated gli1ts269/+ incrosses did not segregate clearly into a 3:1 phenotypic ratio (Fig. 3M), possibly due to gli1 haploinsufficiency (Karlstrom et al., 2003), although likely homozygous gli1 mutants could be identified (Fig. 3F,L). The effect of cyclopamine on gli1ts269/+ progeny was confirmed in MZsmo mutants injected with gli1 MO (Fig. 3N), supporting a model in which Hh signaling-independent Gli1 activity promotes PMN formation.
To study the roles of other zebrafish Gli proteins in PMN development, we quantified these neurons in MZsmo embryos injected with MOs targeting gli2a, gli2b or gli3. In comparison to uninjected MZsmo embryos, gli2b knockdown significantly depleted PMNs (Fig. 3N). Knockdown of gli2a increased PMN number in MZsmo zebrafish, and, although loss of gli3 function did not significantly perturb PMN formation, tandem gli2a/gli3 or gli2a/gli2b/gli3 knockdowns led to even greater increases in PMN number. These manipulations did not affect RB neurons but did alter ptc1 transcript levels (supplementary material Fig. S6), confirming the specificity of these reagents. Analogous perturbations do not influence more dorsal interneuron types (England et al., 2011). Thus, in the absence of Hh signaling, gli1 and gli2b can promote PMN formation, whereas gli2a, and to a lesser extent gli3, inhibit this process.
RA signaling promotes PMN induction in the absence of Hh signaling
Since RA signaling can promote motoneuron specification in amniotes and is localized to the anterior region where PMNs persist in MZsmo embryos, we investigated whether RA pathway activity specifies PMNs in these mutants. We treated wild-type and MZsmo zebrafish with either exogenous RA or the aldehyde dehydrogenase 1a2 (Aldh1a2) inhibitor DEAB (supplementary material Fig. S7) (Grandel et al., 2002; Begemann et al., 2004), and quantified PMN specification. DEAB inhibited PMN formation slightly in wild-type embryos but more potently in MZsmo mutants (Fig. 3N, Fig. 4A), with the few PMNs remaining in DEAB-treated MZsmo zebrafish being largely restricted to rostral regions (supplementary material Fig. S8). This effect was rescued by exogenous RA dosed at physiological levels (10 nM), and higher concentrations (100 nM) induced supernumerary PMNs in both wild-type and MZsmo embryos (Fig. 4A; supplementary material Fig. S8). These observations suggest that the PMNs remaining in MZsmo zebrafish are specified, at least in part, through RA signaling (supplementary material Fig. S7D). RA also induced greater numbers of RB sensory neurons (supplementary material Fig. S9), consistent with findings in Xenopus (Franco et al., 1999).
RA signaling can promote basal Gli activity
To determine whether basal Gli activity and RA signaling act independently to promote PMN specification, we analyzed the effects of RA signaling perturbations on the Hh pathway state in wild-type and MZsmo embryos. Altered RA signaling did not significantly change ptc1 expression within the neural tube of wild-type embryos (Fig. 4B,D,F), although transcription of the RA target hoxb4a was affected (supplementary material Fig. S10). Nor could significant RA signaling-dependent changes in ptc1 transcription be detected by qRT-PCR analyses of these embryos (supplementary material Fig. S11). However, ptc1 within the neural tube of MZsmo embryos was moderately inhibited by DEAB (Fig. 4C,E; supplementary material Fig. S10), and exogenous RA increased ptc1 transcription in the posterior neural tube (Fig. 4G). qRT-PCR analysis of MZsmo zebrafish also showed that elevated RA signaling can promote expression of the Hh targets gli1, hedgehog-interacting protein (hhip) and ptc2, although the neural tube-localized increase in ptc1 staining was less apparent in these whole-embryo measurements (supplementary material Figs S11 and S12).
Intrigued by the effects of exogenous RA on global gli1 transcript levels, we investigated whether RA signaling can regulate gli1 activity in the zebrafish neural tube. RA or DEAB treatment did not detectably affect gli1 expression within the developing spinal cords of wild-type or MZsmo embryos (supplementary material Fig. S13), suggesting that RA signaling does not modulate this factor in this tissue. Nor did RA or DEAB treatment perturb gli2a or gli3 expression (data not shown). However, gli2b is expressed in an anteroposterior gradient within the neural tube (Fig. 4H-K), and DEAB treatment reduced gli2b transcript levels (Fig. 4,H,I,L,M). Exogenous RA increased gli2b transcription posteriorly (Fig. 4,H,I,N,O). The correlation between RA signaling-dependent gli2b expression and MZsmo PMN induction, along with the observation that the gli2b MO depletes these PMNs, suggest that modulation of gli2b expression and thereby its basal activity is at least one component of RA-dependent motoneurogenesis. England et al. have similarly proposed that RA is required independently of Shh signaling to pattern the ventral spinal cord (England et al., 2011).
RA signaling and basal Gli activity modulate PMN progenitor cell formation and neural proliferation
To investigate how RA signaling and basal Gli activity might cooperate to induce motoneurogenesis, we investigated their contributions to the formation of olig2-expressing motoneuron progenitors and cell proliferation within the neural tube. Motoneuron progenitors that persist after Smo inhibition by cyclopamine or SANT75, a structurally distinct Smo antagonist (Yang et al., 2009), require both RA signaling and basal Gli activity for their formation (supplementary material Fig. S14) [for analyses of other progenitor domains, see England et al. (England et al., 2011)]. We also found that ablation of Smo function diminished neural proliferation, which could be further reduced by DEAB treatment (supplementary material Fig. S15). Loss of basal Gli activity decreased the number of mitotic cells as well, although to a lesser extent. These results suggest that both RA signaling and basal Gli activity promote motoneurogenesis at least in part by inducing progenitor cell formation and neural proliferation.
Conclusions
Surprisingly, zebrafish that completely lack smo and therefore Hh signaling retain motoneurogenic capabilities, particularly within the rostral regions of the developing spinal cord. PMN formation in these embryos is promoted by basal, Hh ligand-independent Gli activity and RA signaling, with the latter acting in part by inducing gli2b transcription and potentiating Hh target gene expression. Although we cannot rule out the possibility that other mechanisms enable PMN development in the absence of Hh signaling, our findings demonstrate the functional significance of basal Gli activity and Hh signaling-independent modes of Gli control, and they reconcile the apparent discrepancies between Hh pathway-dependent ventral neural tube patterning in teleosts (Chen et al., 2001; Varga et al., 2001) and in mammals (Chiang et al., 1996). Similar Hh ligand-independent mechanisms of Gli regulation might contribute to other cell fate decisions in developmental and oncogenic contexts.
Acknowledgements
We thank Dr Katharine E. Lewis for helpful discussions and Dr Rolf O. Karlstrom for providing Gli mutant zebrafish.
Funding
This work was supported by an American Cancer Society Research Scholar Grant [RSG-08-041-01-DDC to J.K.C.]; and a California Institute for Regenerative Medicine Scholar Award [T1-0001 to J.K.M.].
References
Competing interests statement
The authors declare no competing financial interests.